Country Zest & Style Holiday 2019 Edition

Page 44

A Middleburg-centric Crew Unlike Any Other “Nowhere else does the holidays quite like Middleburg, Virginia” Garden & Gun Magazine

Saturday, December 7th  11:00am: Middleburg Hunt

Review, horses and hounds!  2:00pm: Christmas Parade, 1.5 miles long! $20 parking per vehicle includes shuttle bus and program guide

 Angel Sponsors 

Use these sponsors for all your needs! They provide excellent support for our community, and they’ll provide excellent service to you, too!

www.ChristmasinMiddleburg.org 44

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By William H. (Mike) du Pont

ack in the 1950s, several Middleburg teenagers, including Sandy Young and my brother, Victor, went off to boarding school at the Pomfret School in Eastern Connecticut, a fine institution with a very active sports program. Pomfret was particularly known for its’ crew teams, which often won the New England secondary school rowing championship. They rowed four-oared shells like most of the secondary schools, but the colleges and universities rowed eights. In their fifth form year (11th grade) Sandy and Vic both went out for crew, Vic as an oarsman, Sandy as a coxswain. Vic was a big, coordinated, muscular lad, first string varsity football. Sandy was more diminutive, but a first-class fellow, well-liked by all and known back then as “the Gnat.” As crew season came, they were both placed in the same shell, designated No. 2 on the crew team, with the No. 1 shell all seniors. However, as the practice season approached the competition season, it became very apparent that Sandy’s crew had the superior shell on the water. His crew consisted of William Marris ( known as “Limey”), as No. 1 oar, Pete Roudabush No. 2, Vic du Pont No. 3, Sandy Bricken No. 4 or stroke and, of course, Sandy Young as coxswain. Marris was an English boy who had come over for one year in an American school. Some would think “Limey” was a pejorative nickname for an Englishman, but I think not. In the 18th century, the English discovered that limes (vitamin C) cured scurvy, the scourge of sailors long at sea. Well done “Limeys!” Sandy’s team was out as Pomfret’s No. 1 shell through the competitions that season. The races were held every Saturday and consisted of shells from several different schools. They won all their races except one, finishing a close second to Brown and Nichols. The crew season culminated in the Great Worcester Regatta held on Lake Quinsigamon near Worcester, Massachusetts. The competition consisted of two three-quarter mile sprints for each ranking: Nos. 1, 2 and 3 shells. These were extremely tough competitions; an oarsman had to be very fit because they rowed the body of the race at about 32 strokes a minute and finished at 40-plus. Wyatt Garfield, coach of the crew team, felt that the seniors should have the honor of representing Pomfret as the No . 1 boat and Sandy Young and his boat would be No. 2, much to their chagrin. The races went on, and, predictably, the seniors lost their race. Sandy and Vic’s boat not only won, they set the fastest time overall on Lake Quinsigamon that day. The job of the coxswain is much more important than appears. He not only steers the shell and beats time for the oars to row to, he’s the leader of the shell. He must keep the oarsmen’s spirits up, together, controlled and focused. With a shell full of 17- and 18-year-old boys just starting to feel their oats, this was a big job. And with Bricken and du Pont in your shell, this was really a big job! They sometimes lost a firm grip on their control and focus but definitely had the strength and drive. And Sandy Young, now a long-time Middleburg resident, held it all together and produced what many consider to be the finest crew in the history of Pomfret School. William H. (Mike) du Pont is a long-time Middleburg resident and former MFH of the Orange County Hounds.

Country ZEST & Style | Holiday 2019


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Articles inside

Cup of Coffee - An Admirable Act of Pure Steeplechasing Sportsmanship

4min
page 62

Sporting Pursuits

3min
pages 60-61

It's a Fabulous New Day for Upperville Horse Show

3min
pages 58-59

Perspectives on Childhood, Education and Parenting

2min
page 56

Vineyard View - A Sommelier's Story at a Historic Location

3min
pages 54-55

A Christmas Concert

1min
page 53

Keeping a Year End List and Checking it Twice

2min
page 52

Archwood Green Barns Winter Market Goes Through Dec. 22

2min
page 51

A Hunting They Will Stay (In Middleburg)

2min
page 50

For Gomer Pyles, the Planet is a Playground

2min
page 48

Property Writes - Smitten Farm Lane

2min
pages 46-47

A Middleburg-centric Crew Unlike Any Other

2min
page 44

Saying Goodbye to a Middleburg Gem

2min
page 43

That Old-Timer Music Offers a Happy Place

3min
page 40

A Small Town Mayor with a Big Time Vision

3min
page 39

Garden Club's Going Green

2min
page 38

American Legion Marching Toward a Bright Future

2min
page 36

The Natural Order and Open Space

2min
page 35

At Nick's Market in Marshall, There's Something For Everyone

2min
page 34

Celebrations

3min
page 30

Style

2min
page 29

Cantankerous to the End, and a Great Friend

4min
pages 26-27

Serving it All Up

2min
page 25

A Christmas Wish List

2min
page 24

Conservation Easements Benefit Everyone

2min
page 22

An Aging Antidote: Just Move It!

2min
page 20

Salamander Has a Five-Star Rating, and GM

3min
page 18

O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum!

2min
pages 16-17

Someone's in the Kitchen With ...

3min
page 14

Dangerous Blind Bombing Set Stage for D-Day

3min
pages 1-13

Sporting Pursuits

1min
page 11

Country Zest

1min
page 9

Holiday Happenings

2min
page 8

For Wayne Gibbens, It's Been a Lifetime of Good Works

3min
page 6

Unique Artist Seizes an Opportunity

3min
page 5

Middleburg Just Loves a Parade

2min
page 3
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